Selected Product: | The New Oxford American Dictionary Hardcover Edition: 2 Author: Erin McKean Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA Release Date: 2005-05-19 ISBN-10: 0195170776 ISBN-13: 9780195170771 List Price: $60.00 Average Customer Rating: | | The Chicago Manual of Style ISBN-10: 0226104036 ISBN-13: 9780226104034 List Price:$55.00 The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition ISBN-10: 0618701729 ISBN-13: 9780618701728 List Price:$60.00 Atlas of the World: 15th Edition with free wall map (Atlas of the World) ISBN-10: 0195374517 ISBN-13: 9780195374513 List Price:$80.00 Oxford American Writer's Thesaurus ISBN-10: 0195342844 ISBN-13: 9780195342840 List Price:$40.00 Roget's International Thesaurus, 6th Edition ISBN-10: 0060935448 ISBN-13: 9780060935443 List Price:$16.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The New Oxford American Dictionary by Erin McKean (ISBN-10: 0195170776, ISBN-13: 9780195170771). At this time we have not yet written a review for The New Oxford American Dictionary by Erin McKean (ISBN-10: 0195170776, ISBN-13: 9780195170771). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Produced by Oxford's American Dictionaries Program, and drawing on the expertise of scores of American scholars and advisors, The New Oxford American Dictionary sets the standard of excellence for lexicography in this country.
Here is the most accurate and richly descriptive picture of American English ever offered in any dictionary. Oxford's American editors drew on our 200-million-word databank of contemporary North American English, plus the unrivaled citation files of the world-renowned Oxford English Dictionary. We started with American evidence--an unparalleled resource unique to Oxford. Our staff logged more than 50 editor-years, checking every entry and every definition. Oxford's ongoing North American Reading Program, begun in the early 1980s, keeps our lexicographers in touch with fresh evidence of our language and usage--in novels and newspapers, in public records and magazines, and on-line, too.
To provide unprecedented clarity, the entries are organized around core meanings, reflecting the way people think about words and eliminating the clutter and confusion of a traditional dictionary entry. Each entry plainly shows the major meaning or meanings of the word, plus any related senses, arranged in intuitive constellations of connected meanings. Definitions are supplemented by illustrative, in-context examples of actual usage.
This major new edition of The New Oxford American Dictionary includes a guide to the pronunciations on every page, a new etymology essay by Anatoly Liberman, completely updated and revised maps, and more than a thousand new entries, covering everything new in our language from low-carb to warblog and beyond.
This edition of The New Oxford American Dictionary also includes a lexicographical first--a portable version of the entire dictionary that can be downloaded to your PDA or smartphone! Have the authority of The New Oxford American Dictionary at your fingertips, wherever you are. Keep the print edition by your favorite reading chair and download the portable version to your phone or PDA, and you'll never be at a loss for words.
The New Oxford American Dictionary is designed to serve the user clearly, simply, and quickly, with the precise guidance you expect from Oxford University Press. With in-depth and up-to-date coverage that all users need and expect--for reading and study, for technical terms, for language guidance--it continues the tradition of scholarship and lexicographic excellence that are the hallmarks of every Oxford dictionary. Web Site A companion web site is now available at www.oup.com/us/noad. Lacks a lot of words. | Customer Rating: | I bought this hoping it would be "complete". It is a disappointment. I watch Bill O'Reilly and like to look up the words he closes with.... most are not in this dictionary. "Bloviate" is not here.... plus lots of other words, some admittedly not common. I'm disappointed. I expected better.
JKH | Too few entries. | Customer Rating: | | I simply come across far too many words that are just not in this dictionary. Also, a significant problem with the Kindle edition: if a word has more than one entry, only the first entry is shown or accessible. Very disappointing. | Popular Dictionary, not good for Proper Names | Customer Rating: | This dictionary is a Pop dictionary, and is not really appropriate for scholarly reference or for people looking for more detailed information. It's fine for general definitions and etymology, but really poor for proper names.
Each proper name entry is the same length (about three sentences), regardless of who the person is. Thus Tom Cruise gets nearly as much space as Abraham Lincoln, and the entries for Stephen King and Martin Luther King are the same length. Important historical figures like Jan Hus--the Bohemian revolutionary whose religious ideas predated the Reformation--are nowhere to be found, but if you're looking for Julia Roberts, no problem.
The editorical decisions on the entries for nations are equally bizarre. For instance, the entry on the United States is only slightly longer than the one for Tunisia. No offense to Tunisians, but this seems like an absurd attempt to be even-handed and to not make value judgements about the importance of one place over another. The nation entries also don't provide any history, demographics, or topography--really they don't provide much of anything beyond a generic description that tells you what continent you're on.
This is not a dictionary for people who like details. No definition is more than 2-3 sentences, regardless of how important it is. The editors also don't make any decisions about what is important. Why does Bach get the same treatment as Scriabin? I seriously question the motives of Oxford University Press. It seems like an intentionally dumbed-down edition meant to appeal to Americans--something we should all take offense at. | Great Dictionary | Customer Rating: | | It's a great reference book/dictionary but didn't realized it was too big. Anyway, it's for my husband's office so no big deal, I might get a smaller one for my son in school if I they have it online. | Disappointed - compare first | Customer Rating: | CONSIDERATION: go to the Library or bookstore and compare before buying.
I was so eager to get a copy of the NOAD, based on one of the reviews in particular and on the generally excellent reviews, that I spent extra money to speed delivery (for a dictionary!).
I'm sadly disappointed.
I had hoped NOAD would top my old American Heritage Dictionary (AHD). I have loved the AHD for years but hoped to get even more etymologies from the NOAD. That was my main interest - to have the ultimate source for word origins in a reasonable tome, that is in a single manageable volume.
The NOAD has several flaws, by my lights:
1 - the etymologies are way too HARD to locate! you have to search carefully to find these. WHY??? They are too subtly denoted. ... the AHD etymologies are immediately locatable and pop out nicely without contrasting or competing with the main text. Also, judging from a few I've searched for, the AHD does a better job of summarizing the etymologies, making them more succinct and readable.
2 - unexpectedly, I find the too-white paper of the NOAD to be STARK (as in eye-straining) and too contrasty with the cheap-looking print. The over-white paper makes the graphics look cheaper. Also, I don't like the pictures being interspersed with the body of the dictionary; they break up the text in a cluttery way. ... the AHD has a pleasing off-white paper and the text is totally readable and comfortable on the eyes and the numerous graphics are neatly off to the side in a half column on each page.
I was surprised that the NOAD is not an inviting book to look at, as is the AHD. It's a subtle difference, but I definitely prefer the AHD (old one I have, anyway).
Perhaps I should have trusted my reaction to the NOAD cover: I was put off by the cold blue cover (red-white-blue motif, mostly blue) design. I had a suspicion that it foretold problems. I was right. But that's just my taste, maybe. I think not; but, I know tastes do vary.
I have only perused the NOAD for a half hour. Maybe I'll reassess my views later. But I doubt it.
If I put the AHD next to the NOAD, I am slightly repulsed by the NOAD and definitely attracted to the AHD, even with the cover removed. The NOAD coverless book is almost black.
A side note: the NOAD has no word roots in the back. Maybe that is way too esoteric for most users. But I kind of liked having those ancient roots available despite almost never using them. They gave the AHD an aura of depth and seriousness which, combined with the inviting and comfortably presented definitions made for a satisfying whole. Actually, they could have left the root section out; but somehow it was nice to know it was there just to remind me that language is sooooo ancient. The NOAD not having such diminishes it in my opinion.
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